4,488 research outputs found
Decay of highly-correlated spin states in a dipolar-coupled solid
We have measured the decay of NMR multiple quantum coherence intensities both
under the internal dipolar Hamiltonian as well as when this interaction is
effectively averaged to zero, in the cubic calcium fluoride (CaF2) spin system
and the pseudo one-dimensional system of fluoroapatite. In calcium fluoride the
decay rates depend both on the number of correlated spins in the cluster, as
well as on the coherence number. For smaller clusters, the decays depend
strongly on coherence number, but this dependence weakens as the size of the
cluster increases. The same scaling was observed when the coherence
distribution was measured in both the usual Zeeman or z basis and the x basis.
The coherence decay in the one dimensional fluoroapatite system did not change
significantly as a function of the multiple quantum growth time, in contrast to
the calcium fluoride case. While the growth of coherence orders is severely
restricted in this case, the number of correlated spins should continue to
grow, albeit more slowly. All coherence intensities were observed to decay as
Gaussian functions in time. In all cases the standard deviation of the observed
decay appeared to scale linearly with coherence number.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures. submitted to PR
The impact of organizational pressures on environmental performance of firms
The role of various organizational pressures in influencing performance of firms has been an interesting research topic in a variety of fields and has received the attention of researchers working in the field of environmental strategy. Although there are previous studies that have looked at the influence of various pressures in influencing firms' environmental strategies, our study provides a more holistic analysis considering a variety of such pressures in a single framework. We discuss a research study to analyze how pressures from internal and external stakeholders of a firm, economic pressures, environmental regulations, and pressures of environmental compliance have affected environmental performance of firms using data collected from manufacturing firms in the United Kingdom. We have found that internal stakeholders provide the greatest impact in shaping environmental performance of firms, closely followed by economic pressures, environmental regulations, and external stakeholders in that order. Fears of penalties due to environmental compliance have the least impact, although this pressure also has a positive and significant impact on environmental performance. © 2014 The Authors. Business Ethics: A European Review © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
On semistable principal bundles over a complex projective manifold, II
Let (X, \omega) be a compact connected Kaehler manifold of complex dimension
d and E_G a holomorphic principal G-bundle on X, where G is a connected
reductive linear algebraic group defined over C. Let Z (G) denote the center of
G. We prove that the following three statements are equivalent: (1) There is a
parabolic subgroup P of G and a holomorphic reduction of the structure group of
E_G to P (say, E_P) such that the bundle obtained by extending the structure
group of E_P to L(P)/Z(G) (where L(P) is the Levi quotient of P) admits a flat
connection; (2) The adjoint vector bundle ad(E_G) is numerically flat; (3) The
principal G-bundle E_G is pseudostable, and the degree of the charateristic
class c_2(ad(E_G) is zero.Comment: 15 page
Quasi-Static Brittle Fracture in Inhomogeneous Media and Iterated Conformal Maps: Modes I, II and III
The method of iterated conformal maps is developed for quasi-static fracture
of brittle materials, for all modes of fracture. Previous theory, that was
relevant for mode III only, is extended here to mode I and II. The latter
require solution of the bi-Laplace rather than the Laplace equation. For all
cases we can consider quenched randomness in the brittle material itself, as
well as randomness in the succession of fracture events. While mode III calls
for the advance (in time) of one analytic function, mode I and II call for the
advance of two analytic functions. This fundamental difference creates
different stress distribution around the cracks. As a result the geometric
characteristics of the cracks differ, putting mode III in a different class
compared to modes I and II.Comment: submitted to PRE For a version with qualitatively better figures see:
http://www.weizmann.ac.il/chemphys/ander
Hall carrier density and magnetoresistance measurements in thin film vanadium dioxide across the metal-insulator transition
Temperature dependent magneto-transport measurements in magnetic fields of up
to 12 Tesla were performed on thin film vanadium dioxide (VO2) across the
metal-insulator transition (MIT). The Hall carrier density increases by 4
orders of magnitude at the MIT and accounts almost entirely for the resistance
change. The Hall mobility varies little across the MIT and remains low,
~0.1cm2/V sec. Electrons are found to be the major carriers on both sides of
the MIT. Small positive magnetoresistance in the semiconducting phase is
measured
The nil Hecke ring and singularity of Schubert varieties
We give a criterion for smoothness of a point in any Schubert variety in any
G/B in terms of the nil Hecke ring.Comment: AMSTE
Dynamics and Instabilities of Planar Tensile Cracks in Heterogeneous Media
The dynamics of tensile crack fronts restricted to advance in a plane are
studied. In an ideal linear elastic medium, a propagating mode along the crack
front with a velocity slightly less than the Rayleigh wave velocity, is found
to exist. But the dependence of the effective fracture toughness on
the crack velocity is shown to destabilize the crack front if
. Short wavelength radiation due to weak random
heterogeneities leads to this instability at low velocities. The implications
of these results for the crack dynamics are discussed.Comment: 12 page
Dynamical stability of the crack front line
Dynamical stability of the crack front line that propagates between two
plates is studied numerically using the simple two-dimensional mass-spring
model. It is demonstrated that the straight front line is unstable for low
speed while it becomes stable for high speed. For the uniform model, the
roughness exponent in the slower speed region is fairly constant around 0.4 and
there seems to be a rough-smooth transition at a certain speed. For the
inhomogeneous case with quenched randomness, the transition is gradual.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Construction delays causing risks on time and cost - a critical review
There is an increase in the number of construction projects experiencing extensive delays leading to exceeding initial time and cost budget. This paper reviews 41 studies around the world which surveyed the delay factors and classified them into Groups. The main purpose of this paper is to review literature, each of which have categorized the causes that are responsible for time delays and cost overrun in projects. The collected list has 113 causes for delays categorized in to 18 different groups. Most of the researches have analysed the responses from the Questionnaire survey. The collected data are used to rank the problem. The data are further used to investigate and analyse Important Index, Frequency Index, Severity Index, Relative Important Index, Relative Importance Weight, Weighted Average, Mean, Standard Deviation and Variance. The collective comparison has revealed that the ranking given by all the researchers is not the same. Further each and every study has different rank ratings for the different group of the delays. This review paper attempts to provide an updated compilation of the earlier studies on ranking of the delay causers, which are never similar and constant for universal projects. It is concluded that a separate study is required for identifying the factors causing delay for projects operated in Sabah, East Malaysia
Rituximab monitoring and redosing in pediatric neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To study rituximab in pediatric neuromyelitis optica (NMO)/NMO spectrum disorders (NMOSD) and the relationship between rituximab, B cell repopulation, and relapses in order to improve rituximab monitoring and redosing.
METHODS:
Multicenter retrospective study of 16 children with NMO/NMOSD receiving 652 rituximab courses. According to CD19 counts, events during rituximab were categorized as "repopulation," "depletion," or "depletion failure" relapses (repopulation threshold CD19 6510
7 10(6) cells/L).
RESULTS:
The 16 patients (14 girls; mean age 9.6 years, range 1.8-15.3) had a mean of 6.1 events (range 1-11) during a mean follow-up of 6.1 years (range 1.6-13.6) and received a total of 76 rituximab courses (mean 4.7, range 2-9) in 42.6-year cohort treatment. Before rituximab, 62.5% had received azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, or cyclophosphamide. Mean time from rituximab to last documented B cell depletion and first repopulation was 4.5 and 6.8 months, respectively, with large interpatient variability. Earliest repopulations occurred with the lowest doses. Significant reduction between pre- and post-rituximab annualized relapse rate (ARR) was observed (p = 0.003). During rituximab, 6 patients were relapse-free, although 21 relapses occurred in 10 patients, including 13 "repopulation," 3 "depletion," and 4 "depletion failure" relapses. Of the 13 "repopulation" relapses, 4 had CD19 10-50
7 10(6) cells/L, 10 had inadequate monitoring ( 641 CD19 in the 4 months before relapses), and 5 had delayed redosing after repopulation detection.
CONCLUSION:
Rituximab is effective in relapse prevention, but B cell repopulation creates a risk of relapse. Redosing before B cell repopulation could reduce the relapse risk further.
CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE:
This study provides Class IV evidence that rituximab significantly reduces ARR in pediatric NMO/NMOSD. This study also demonstrates a relationship between B cell repopulation and relapses
- …
